<b><b><b>2018 National Book Foundation's 5 Under 35 Honoree</b><br>Recipient of the American Academy of Arts and Letters Rosenthal Family Foundation Award in Literature<br><b>An <i>Elle</i> Magazine Most Anticipated Novel</b></b> <p/>Praise for <i>Sonora</i></b> <p/>This debut powerfully evokes the sense of being an outsider.<br><b><i>--The New Yorker</i></b> <p/>A kaleidoscopic venture for the senses . . . <i>Sonora </i>is an artful construction by a writer of wondrous talent. <br><b><b>--New Orleans Review </b></b> <p/>Mesmerizing. <br><b><b><i>--The Brooklyn Rail </i></b> </b> <p/>Powerful... <i>Sonora</i> is a poetic coming-of-age story about friendship, identity, secrets, and obsession that will haunt you long after you turn the final page. <br><b>--Bustle </b> <p/>Assadi writes poetically about the Southwest . . . a mesmerizing take on tripping blindly into adulthood. <br><b>--The Huffington Post </b> <p/><i>Sonora</i> is a paean to the vexing process of how a second-generation immigrant struggles to come to terms with herself and history. <br>--<b>Christian Science Monitor</b> <p/>Hannah Lillith Assadi's <i>Sonora</i> is a beautiful desert wind of a novel--wild, plangent and revealing. Fans of Denis Johnson will find in Assadi a similarly edgy and visionary writer. Both disturbing and touching, <i>Sonora</i> is a brilliant debut novel. Assadi is an exciting talent, and a writer to watch.<br><b>--Shelf Awareness, Starred Review</b> <p/><i>Sonora</i> is the most eerie and unusual coming of age story I've ever encountered--not a tale of innocence lost, but of innocence never had. In a story steeped in sorcery and curses, Assadi looks to the heavens, wild-eyed and bewildered.<br><b>--Catherine Lacey, author of <i>Nobody Is Ever Missing</i></b><br><i></i> <br>In <i>Sonora</i>, the underworld and the desert are always nibbling at the edges of the two young women's reality, trying to save them or speak to them . . . Like the biblical tradition of passage through the desert, Ahlam emerges transformed. And so too does the reader. <br><b>--Tablet Magazine</b> <p/><i>Sonora</i> is as striking as it is unforgettable.<br><b>--The Fanzine</b> <p/>With penetrating grace, Hannah Lillith Assadi details the intoxicating precarity of being young and alive and desperate to change. <i>Sonora </i>is unforgettable and deeply felt, the type of book that brings you close, infiltrates you, and leaves you with the sense that you've just lived an entire life. <br><b>--Alexandra Kleeman, author of <i>You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine</i></b> <p/>In <i>Sonora</i>, Hannah Lillith Assadi documents, with lyric ferocity, the agony, love, and bafflement of belonging to a family. A scorching story of youth and the losses and sorrows of growing up estranged. <b><br>--Ben Marcus, author of <i>Leaving the Sea</i> <p/></b>Assadi's characters are on a trip, as is their author, and <i>Sonora</i>, a pleasure to read, is both a beginning and about a beginning--an origin story for the writer and the reader. <br><b>--Donald Antrim, author of <i>The Emerald Light in the Air </i></b> <p/>Landscape becomes dreamscape in Assadi's evocative and provocative exploration of a world divided. Written with masterful artistry, <i>Sonora</i> is, in equal parts, a beautiful and intelligent novel. <br><b>--Binnie Kirshenbaum, author of <i>The Scenic Route</i></b> <p/>Hannah Lillith Assadi's <i>Sonora </i>is a mystical and haunting landscape and she guides us through it with boundless grace and sharp, luminous poetry. This extraordinarily assured debut novel feels both old and timeless, like the desert and New York City, while remaining fresh and urgent and impossible to put down. Here we have a compelling cast of young and old, strangers and friends, lovers and family, immigrants and natives, as they try to find their place in a vast and complicated country. <br><b>--Robert Lopez, author of <i>Kamby Bolongo Mean River</i></b> <p/>Assadi uses her words like a painter, coloring the beauty of the desert with gorgeous descriptions of saguaros, palo verdes and bougainvillea. <br><b><i>--Phoenix Magazine</i></b> <p/>Unique in its portrayal of a Jewish-Palestinian family . . . [and] universal in its depiction of the quest for identity, for love, for belonging.<br><b>--Nimrod International Journal Online</b> <p/>A lyrical meditation on the confusion and awe of growing up that is made beautifully strange by the desert's haunting presence . . . both typical and painfully, relatably fresh . . . Lyrical, raw, and moving.<br><b>--<i>Kirkus Reviews<br></i></b><br>This poetic, multicultural novel will enchant younger adults or anyone who has ever felt out of place in the world. <br><b><i>--Library Journal</i>, Starred Review</b> <p/>Wise and poetic . . . Glimpses of the otherworldly abound, alongside an abiding interest in the cosmos, and Assadi's lyrical prose nicely complements these preoccupations with the unreal or the ungraspable. The structure, moving back and forth in time and space, adds a sense of the magical to a sometimes tragic but always beautiful coming-of-age story. <br><b>--<i>Publishers Weekly</i></b> <p/>Assadi's first novel is--like Ahlam's dreams--fevered, fragmented, and impressionistic . . . lushly poetic . . . will interest those looking for a stylish read. <br><b>--<i>Booklist</i></b>
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